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Tribune by Prof. Othmane Benmoussa from Euromed Polytechnic School published on Medias24
Remote collaboration has become much more common, especially since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic.
However, a new study of 17 million scientific publications over the past 45 years finds that researchers who collaborated locally were much more likely to acquire new knowledge from their teammates than those who worked remotely.
The trend was particularly pronounced for science and engineering researchers, as well as early-career academics, suggesting that exclusively remote working may inhibit innovation at the level of academic circles and R&D departments alike. organizational structures in general.
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